The Consolidation of the Communist Dictatorship Flashcards

1
Q

What were three of the main problems the Bolsheviks faced - threatened to end Bolshevik rule?

A

The war with Germany was still being fought
Bolsheviks had substantial support within the cities but support in the countryside was still limited
The Bolsheviks faced strikes by civil servants who refuses to cooperate with the new government

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2
Q

What three other problems did the Bolsheviks faced - threatened to end Bolshevik rule?

A

The State Bank refused to provide the Bolsheviks with financial support (only agreed under threat of armed invasion)
There were food shortages in the cities
It had to take place with a large number of strikes which were taking place at this time+ combat the forced of Kerensky who had rallied an army of 18 Cossack regiments and a small force of SR cadets and officers

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3
Q

What did Bolsheviks change within the government in attempt to move away from Russia’s past?

A

‘Ministers’ were replaced with ‘People’s Commissars’
The Sovnarkom replaced the Cabinet
An Elite from the Bolshevik Central Committee was formalised into the Politburo in 1919

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4
Q

When was the Cheka (secret police) established and why?

A

December 1917 - to begin supressing all political opponents

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5
Q

What was the Cheka’s full title and who headed it?

A

The All Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage#
Headed by Felix Dzerzhinsky

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6
Q

How many employees did the Cheka have in March 1918 v 1921?

A
1918= 120
1921 = 143,000
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7
Q

What was introduced by The Cheka?

A

Labour camps to imprison political prisoners

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8
Q

In 1918 alone how many people did the Cheka kill?

A

50,000

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9
Q

What was the outcome of the November Constituent Assembly elections arranged by the PG?

A

Bolsheviks secured only 24% of the vote and gained only 1/4 of the seats in the Assembly (outvoted by the SR’s who got 53% of the vote)

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10
Q

Despite allowing the Constituent Assembly to meet who did Lenin declare they must be subservient to?

A

The Sovnarkom and the Soviets

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11
Q

On the 5th of January what did the members of the Constituent Assembly do?

A

Rejected Lenin’s demand by a vote of 237 to 137

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12
Q

What was Lenin’s response to the Constituent Assembly’s decision?

A

He ordered the Red Guard to surround the building where they met and deny the elected representatives entry - this effectively brought the Constituent Assembly to an end after one day 5 Jan 1918

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13
Q

How did Lenin justify his action of closing the Constituent Assembly?

A

Claimed he did it to defend democracy
Claimed the election had been based on old party lists which didn’t recognise the difference between left and right SR’s so it didn’t reflect the will of the people

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14
Q

What other argument did Lenin give for ending the Constituent Assembly?

A

The soviets were a form of radical direct democracy but the Constituent Assembly was a form of bourgeois democracy (people only got a vote every 4-5 years)
Therefore the CA was less democratic than his government that was based on the soviets
People away from the capital may know little about Bolsheviks and what was happening (more convincing argument is Lenin didn’t want to be disputed in an elected assembly)

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15
Q

What was one of the first measures of the new Bolshevik regime?

A

October 1917 - Close down all opposition press - first newspapers of the centre and the right and then the socialist press

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16
Q

What happened to opposition political parties?

A
Kadet party (despite doing well in CA elections) was denounced and outlawed - leading Kadets were arrested and two brutally beaten to death by B sailors
Followed to Prison by Mensheviks and right SR's
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17
Q

What did Lenin actively encourage as a means of intimidating middle classes?

A

Class warfare - started with Kadets as leaders of bourgeois counter-revolution

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18
Q

What did the Bolsheviks then abolish?

A

The legal justice system and replaced it with revolutionary justice - violent in nature

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19
Q

What was example of class warfare?

A

Anyone accused of being Bourgeois was liable to be arrested
Any well dressed person on the street could be accused of being bourgeois and if not arrested could be beaten and robbed
Abolition of titles and use of ‘comrade’ to address people

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20
Q

What did the socialist press encourage?

A

The encouragement perception of them as ‘enemies of the people’ and encouraged people to ‘loot the looters’

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21
Q

What had the majority of people been in favour of rather than one party rule so what pressure did this build?

A

Soviet power - railway men backed by the post and telegraph union threatened to cut off communications if Bolsheviks didn’t hold talks with other parties

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22
Q

What did Lenin have to do as a result of the pressure?

A

Forced him to send representatives to talks about power-sharing government with other parties
Unwillingly allow the planned CA elections to go on in November

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23
Q

Which Bolsheviks supported the idea of shared power government and why - what did they do?

A

Leading Bolsheviks including Kamenev and Zinoviev believed isolated Bolshevik party would have to maintain itself by terror and be destroyed by an inevitable civil war - temporarily resigned when they learned Lenin wasn’t serious about a coalition

24
Q

After engineering the collapse of talks how did Lenin solve the one party rule problem?

A

Made an alliance with the left SR’s and made them junior partners of the Sovnarkom so could claim to represent a large section of peasantry

25
Q

How did the Bolsheviks deal with opposition to the closing of the CA?

A

Crowd of demonstrators was fired on by Sovnarkom and 12 killed (first time soldiers fired o unarmed demonstrators since Feb 1917)

26
Q

How did Lenin’s government based on ‘Dictatorship of the Proletariat’ make it difficult for other parties to exist?

A

Decree on press October 1917 = couldn’t publish own newspapers
Bourgeois lost ability to vote in new social government structure July 1918
1921 all other political parties were banned

27
Q

What was the role of the Cheka?

A

During civil war = protect communist rule
Helped red army take grain from peasants (war communism)
Used extreme violence against enemies of the Communist party
Priests crucified and white army members frozen
Imprisoned opposers and killed people who refused to fight
Ran concentration camps
Closed down socialist newspapers

28
Q

What was the Red Terror?

A

Period of political repression and mass killings carried out by Bolsheviks after beginning of civil war

29
Q

Who did the Cheka target?

A

Counter-revolutionaries / anti-communists
Socialists
Priests
White soldiers

30
Q

Within the Cheka what was the Red Army responsible for?

A

Defending and enlarging communist held territory

In 1918 Cheka and Red Army closed down the CA

31
Q

What happened after the civil war regarding the Cheka?

A

Red terror brought to an end

Socialism hadn’t worked so still a need for Cheka - continued to attack government opponents during the NEP

32
Q

In 1922 what did Lenin order Dzerzhinsky to do?

A

Set up an agency within the GPU to monitor the press

To supervise the deportation of professors and engineers who were suspected of anti-communist ideas

33
Q

What else did the GPU?

A

Kept former tsarist officers, who now served in the red army under control

34
Q

What three other things did the GPU do?

A

Had power to intercept the mail and other forms of communication
Send surveillance reports to central committee
Reported to Central Committee abut drunkenness, gambling and any signs of inequality

35
Q

Why did Lenin organise political trials and what happened?

A

Insecure about future of revolution - ordered Dzerzhinsky to set up political trials of leading social opponents (SR leaders) , they were accused of treason, sabotage and plotting to other-throw soviet state at end of trial in August 1922 all defendants were sentenced to death

36
Q

What were some of the consequences of religious, moral and economic crimes?

A

Imprisoned NEP men who had grown too rich
Harassed women who dressed in western styles
Persecuted young people who listened and danced to Jazz
Persecuted Priests

37
Q

What military problem did the Bolsheviks initially?

A

Since many soldiers from the Petrograd garrison returned to their homes in the countryside immediately after the revolution and Lenin had no direct contact with troops at the front, his forces were smaller in number than those of his opponents

38
Q

What was the Sovnarkom?

A

The cabinet, made up of key government ministers who, between them, would run the country

39
Q

What claim did the Bolsheviks come to power on?

A

That they were acting in the interests of the proletariat

They encouraged people to think the Oct/Nov revolution was a popular rising

40
Q

What was Lenin’s view on democracy?

A
Democracy in the way it is defined in western 'liberal democracies' like Britain was alien to Lenin
For Lenin - trying to compete for votes of ordinary citizens and allowing other views to exist and policy to emerge through discuss belonged to an old class ridden world
41
Q

What was Lenin convinced that the establishment of a ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ (first step to true socialism) would require?

A
The active repression of 'counter-revolutionary' elements 
Driven by Marxist ideology he argued that 'revolutionary mortality' justified strong action - he had always been ruthless as he believed the Bolsheviks were acting in the interests of the working class which was all the authority he needed.
42
Q

Why did Lenin allow elections for a Constituent Assembly go ahead in November and how many people voted?

A

He had previously attacked Kerensky for postponing them

Over 41 million votes were cast in the election

43
Q

What had happened by the time the CA met on 5th Jan 1918 and who chaired the meeting?

A

The Kadet’s had been outlawed for expressing approval of Alexei Kaledin (a Cossack general who had begun a counter-revolutionary rebellion in the Don region)
Bolsheviks proposed it be chaired by a left-wing SR (Maria Spirindovna) but were over-ruled by the right wing SRs majority who chose Victor Chernov

44
Q

What was the reaction to the CA being closed and what were these actions viewed as?

A

Civilians demonstrated against this action and they were fired on with 12 being killed
Although these actions seemed to contradict Marxist ideology ‘power to the people’, Lenin had written for the need of a strong party to provide for the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ and crush any bourgeoise attitudes that remained after revolution

45
Q

What did Lenin claim government represented?

A

The ‘people’ and a higher form of ‘democracy’ but some Bolsheviks and some foreign socialists expressed concern at Lenin’s actions

46
Q

Who lost what in July 1918?

A

The Bourgeoise (including employers, priests anyone viewed as ‘middle class’ or anyone the Bolsheviks mistrusted) lost the right to vote in the new socialist government structure

47
Q

What was banned in 1921?

A

All other political parties

48
Q

What did the dissolution of the CA show?

A

The disregard for other political parties - it was made increasingly difficult for groups like Mensheviks and SRs to exist at all
Showed how the Bolsheviks understood what a government based on ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’ would mean

49
Q

What happened in January and March 1918?

A

Jan - workers put in charge of railways and the old Red Guards were demobilised and a new Red Army of workers and peasants was formed to protect the regime (Red Guard were the base of the new army)
March 1918 - Trotsky placed at the head of the army and the capital was transferred to Moscow to be more central

50
Q

What happened to the Church?

A

The Church and the state were also separated- religion was not banned but Russia became a secular state with the government giving no furthers support to the Orthodox church
The separation decree removed the Church’s judicial powers and its right to own property and many of its assets were seized

51
Q

What else happened to religion?

A

Religious printing presses were closed down and the clergy disenfranchised, left without civil rights and subject to persecution
Some priests were drafted into the Red Army and others (including prominent bishops) were imprisoned
Russia’s move to the Gregorian calendar in Feb 1918 was partly to bring Russia in line with the majority of Europe but was also a statement against traditional religious practices

52
Q

What decree helped to remove the appeal of SRs?

A

Abolishing land ownership because land was given to ‘those who wish to cultivate not for personal profit but for the benefit of the community’ this policy of ‘socialisation of land’ was the programme long advocated by SRs

53
Q

What was proclaimed in July 1918 to oversee the transition to a socialist society and what did it state?

A

The first Soviet Constitution for the ‘Russian Soviet Federal Socialist Republic’
Stated that supreme power lay with the All-Russian Congress of Soviets (made up from deputies from elected local soviets across Russia)
The central executive committee of that Congress was to be the ‘supreme organ of power’ - acting like a president
The congress was also made responsible for electing the Sovnarkom for the purposes of the ‘general administration of the affairs of the state’

54
Q

Despite the new constitution looking democratic on the surface what were the limitations?

A

The vote was reserved for the ‘toiling masses’ so members of the bourgeoise excluded from voting or holding office
The workers vote was weighted five to one against that of the peasants in the election to the All-Russian Congress of Soviets
While Sovnarkom was officially appointed by the Congress, in practice it was chosen by the Bolshevik Central Committee
The Congress was only to meet at intervals so executive authority remained with the Sovnarkom
The structure was centralised and the real focus of power was the party

55
Q

What serious threat was given out?

A

‘He who does not work shall not eat’ - at the time the population largely depended on ration cards so serious threat

56
Q

Despite the term ‘Russian; who did the constitution welcome and what was the problem with this?

A

The non-Russian nationalities that had been a part of the old Russian empire into the new Soviet state
Many people among these national groups who didn’t want to be part of a Russian controlled state - the extent to which they should be forced to join this new organisation or not became a source of friction between leading Bolsheviks